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Nuclear fission reactor

Hollenbach D. F. and J. M. Herndon (2001) Deep-earth reactor Nuclear fission, helium, and the geomagnetic field. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) 98, 11085-11090... [Pg.641]

G. Kessler, Nuclear Fission Reactors, Spriager-Vedag, New York, 1983. [Pg.225]

Approximately 25—30% of a reactor s fuel is removed and replaced during plaimed refueling outages, which normally occur every 12 to 18 months. Spent fuel is highly radioactive because it contains by-products from nuclear fission created during reactor operation. A characteristic of these radioactive materials is that they gradually decay, losing their radioactive properties at a set rate. Each radioactive component has a different rate of decay known as its half-life, which is the time it takes for a material to lose half of its radioactivity. The radioactive components in spent nuclear fuel include cobalt-60 (5-yr half-Hfe), cesium-137 (30-yr half-Hfe), and plutonium-239 (24,400-yr half-Hfe). [Pg.92]

Economic Aspects. The principal market for deuterium has been as a moderator for nuclear fission reactors fueled by unenriched uranium. The decline in nuclear reactor constmetion has sharply reduced the demand for heavy water. The United States has stopped large-scale production of D2O, and Canada is the only suppHer of heavy water at this time. Heavy water is priced as a fine chemical, and its price is not subject to market forces. [Pg.8]

The only large-scale use of deuterium in industry is as a moderator, in the form of D2O, for nuclear reactors. Because of its favorable slowing-down properties and its small capture cross section for neutrons, deuterium moderation permits the use of uranium containing the natural abundance of uranium-235, thus avoiding an isotope enrichment step in the preparation of reactor fuel. Heavy water-moderated thermal neutron reactors fueled with uranium-233 and surrounded with a natural thorium blanket offer the prospect of successful fuel breeding, ie, production of greater amounts of (by neutron capture in thorium) than are consumed by nuclear fission in the operation of the reactor. The advantages of heavy water-moderated reactors are difficult to assess. [Pg.9]

Within nuclear reactors, neutrons are a primary product of nuclear fission. By controlling the rate of the nuclear reactions, one controls the flux of neutrons and provides a steady supply of neutrons. For a diffraction analysis, a narrow band if neutron wavelengths is selected (fixing X) and the angle 20 is varied to scan the range of values. [Pg.652]

Nuclear (fission) reactors produce useful thermal energy from the fission (or disintegration) of isotopes such as and 94Pu . Fission of a heavy... [Pg.429]

Nuclear fission is also involved in nuclear weapons. To create a bomb, the concentration of the isotope uranium-235 must be increased to at least 85 percent from its natural concenti ation of only 0.7 percent. This increase ot concentration is difficult and expensive. In a typical nuclear reactor the uranium-235 concentration in the fuel is only 3 to 4 percent, and hence a nuclear reactor cannot explode like a bomb. In a nuclear bomb... [Pg.848]

The fuel in a nuclear fission reactor is generally "U atoms arranged appropriately in a reactor vessel. Neutrons instigate fission of nuclei ofatoms and liberate energy. The energy output may be controlled either by regulating the fuel and/or adjusting the neu-... [Pg.861]

Some nuclear fission reactors are designed to use natural uranium having 0.7 percent and 99.3 percent CANDU reactors, manufactured in... [Pg.863]

Canada, are examples. These reactors do not use ordinai y water for the moderator. Most nuclear fission reactors use ordinaiy water for a moderator which requires that the fuel he about 3 percent and about 97 percent U. Achieving this enrichment requires that the solid uranium compounds in the yellow cake be converted to gaseous uranium hexafluoride (UF,). Following enrichment, gaseous UF is converted to solid uranium oxide (UO,) for fabrication of fuel elements for a nuclear reactor. [Pg.863]

The products of nuclear fission reactions are radioactive and disintegrate according to their own time scales. Often disintegration leads to other radioactive products. A few of these secondary products emit neutrons that add to the pool of neutrons produced by nuclear fission. Very importantly, neutrons from nuclear fission occur before those from radioactive decay. The neutrons from nuclear fission are termed prompt. Those from radioacth e decay arc termed delayed. A nuclear bomb must function on only prompt neutrons and in so doing requires nearly 100 percent pure (or Pu) fuel. Although reactor... [Pg.864]

Contemporaiy nuclear fission reactors are fueled with either U or In a nuclear fission reactor... [Pg.865]

The fission ofor Tu liberates, on average, two to three neutrons. One neutron is required to sustain the nuclear fission chain reaction. In a nuclear breeder reactor, the extra neutrons are used to induce nuclear reactions that lead to the production of Tu. The sequence begins by arranging for... [Pg.865]

A nuclear power plant generates electricity in a manner similar to a fossil fuel plant. The fundamental difference is the source of heat to create the steam that turns the turbine-generator. A fossil plant relies on the combustion of natural resources (coal, oil) to create steam. A nuclear reactor creates steam with the heat produced from a controlled chain reaction of nuclear fission (the splitting of atoms). [Pg.866]

Uranium-235 and U-238 behave differently in the presence of a controlled nuclear reaction. Uranium-235 is naturally fissile. A fissile element is one that splits when bombarded by a neutron during a controlled process of nuclear fission (like that which occurs in a nuclear reactor). Uranium-235 is the only naturally fissile isotope of uranium. Uranium-238 is fertile. A fertile element is one that is not itself fissile, but one that can produce a fissile element. When a U-238 atom is struck by a neutron, it likely will absorb the neutron to form U-239. Through spontaneous radioactive decay, the U-239 will turn into plutonium (Pu-239). This new isotope of plutonium is fissile, and if struck by a neutron, will likely split. [Pg.868]

Plutonium-239 is a fissile element, and vvill split into fragments when struck by a neutron in the nuclear reactor. This makes Pu-239 similar to U-235, able to produce heat and sustain a controlled nuclear reaction inside the nuclear reactor. Nuclear power plants derive over one-third of their power output from the fission of Pu-239. Most of the uranium inside nuclear fuel is U-238. Only a small fraction is the fissile U-235. Over the life cycle of the nuclear fuel, the U-238 changes into Pu-239, which continues to provide nuclear energy to generate electricity. [Pg.869]

Nuclear reactor development began during the 1940s, following the demonstration of nuclear fission by Fermi in 1942. Since the 1950s, nuclear boilers have been used increasingly for the generation of electrical power. [Pg.61]

The heart of the nuclear reactor boiler plant system is the reactor core, in which the nuclear fission process takes place. Nuclear fission is the splitting of a nucleus into two or more separate nuclei. Fission is usually by neutron particle bombardment and is accompanied by the release of a very large amount of energy, plus additional neutrons, other particles, and radioactive material. The generation of new neutrons during fission makes possible a chain reaction process and the subsequent... [Pg.61]


See other pages where Nuclear fission reactor is mentioned: [Pg.1187]    [Pg.1187]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.313]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.513]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.1256]    [Pg.692]    [Pg.780]    [Pg.848]    [Pg.849]    [Pg.861]    [Pg.861]    [Pg.861]    [Pg.862]    [Pg.862]    [Pg.863]    [Pg.865]    [Pg.865]    [Pg.865]    [Pg.865]    [Pg.870]    [Pg.1097]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.998 , Pg.999 ]




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